| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
There is a newer edition of this item:
|
LEE J. KRAJEWSKI is the William R. and F. Cassie Daley Professor of Manufacturing Strategy at the University of Notre Dame. Prior to joining Notre Dame, Lee was a faculty member at The Ohio State University, where he received the University Alumni Distinguished Teaching Award and the College of Business Outstanding Faculty Research Award. He initiated the Center for Excellence in Manufacturing Management and served as its director for four years. In addition, he received the National President's Award and the National Award of Merit of the American Production and Inventory Control Society. He served as President Elect of the Decision Sciences Institute and was elected a Fellow of the Institute in 1988.
Lee's career spans more than thirty-two years of research and education in the Field of operations management. He has designed and taught courses at both graduate and undergraduate levels on topics such as manufacturing strategy, introduction to operations management, operations design, and manufacturing planning and control systems.
Lee served as the editor of Decision Sciences, was the founding editor of the Journal of Operations Management (1980-1983), and has served on several editorial boards. Widely published himself, Lee has contributed numerous articles to such journals as Decision Sciences, the Journal of Operations Management, Management Science, Harvard Business Review, and Interfaces, to name just a few. He has received five best-paper awards. Lee's areas of specialization include manufacturing strategy, manufacturing planning and control systems, supply-chain management, and master production scheduling.
LARRY RITZMAN is the Thomas J. Galligan, Jr. Professor in Operations and Strategic Management at Boston College. He previously served at The Ohio State University for twenty-three years, where he acted as department chairperson and received several awards for both teaching and research. He received his doctorate at Michigan State University, having had prior industrial experience at the Babcock and Wilcox Company. Over the years, he has been privileged to teach and learn more about operations management with numerous students at all levelsundergraduate, MBA, executive MBA, and doctorate.
Particularly active in the Decision Sciences Institute, Larry has served as Council Coordinator, Publications Committee Chair, Track Chair, Vice President, Board Member, Executive Committee Member, Doctoral Consortium Coordinator, and President. He was elected a Fellow of the Institute in 1987 and earned the Distinguished Service Award in 1996. He has received three best-paper awards. He is a frequent reviewer, discussant, and session chair for several other professional organizations.
Larry's areas of particular expertise are operations strategy, production and inventory systems, forecasting, multistage manufacturing, disaggregation, scheduling, and layout. An active researcher, Larry's publications have appeared in such journals as Decision Sciences, Journal of Operations Management, Production and Operations Management, Harvard Business Review, and Management Science. He has served in various editorial capacities for several journals.
Product Details
Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Operations Management needs better BusinessProcess Knowledge,
By
This review is from: Operations Management: Strategy and Analysis (Hardcover)
I believe a textbook is best reviewed by an instructor who has taught from it. At the University of Alabama in Birmingham, where I served as an adjunct professor in the fall of 1999, my MBA students and I dissected this book, cover-to-cover. It was a rewarding odyssey. As the subtitle suggests, the authors made every attempt to relate managerial decisions on operations to an organization's strategic pursuits. In this fifth edition of their text, the concept of processes was used not only to integrate service organizations' procedures into traditional manufacturing themes but also to draw attention to the growing use of processes and flows as the bases for reinventing adaptable organizations. This lays a good foundation for understanding the sort of efforts at the Center for Coordination Sciences at MIT where the Process Handbook, explicating interdependencies, has just been licensed to the Phios Corporation.With a surge in the use of Enterprise Resource Planning software such as SAP, the treatment of Materials Requirements Planning and the introduction of a new chapter on Supply Chain Management are very timely. The future belongs to web-based transaction processing with forward and backward linkages to customers and suppliers respectively. The authors resourcefully illustrated their topics with actual Managerial Practices and Internet Activities. We analyzed every one of the nineteen Case Studies but sidestepped the Experiential Learning projects only because we did not have enough time. Though we never found the Student CD Version of the text, the OM5 software on-line was quite useful even to analytically challenged students. As the instructor, I appreciated the copious teaching aids that accompany the book. The Instructor's Manual was used with appropriate course outlines from other universities available on the web to fashion a course syllabus aimed at the diverse capabilities of the graduate students. The Solutions Manual helped with the two problem sets assigned and graded every week, as did the Test Bank and the Computerized Test Bank with the examinations. I borrowed a few of the slides from the Instructor's Resource Disk CD-ROM with PowerPoint Presentation which were also available on-line with a protected password. Even without the popcorn, the Operations Management in Action videos were worth a million words. I have devoted so much space to evaluating the teaching aids because they are fast becoming the discriminating factors among textbooks of virtually equal merits. My thanks go to the college representatives and faculty services of both Addison Wesley and Prentice Hall who, even during their merger, supplied me with teaching aids as soon as they were available. This text is geared toward a business school curriculum hence I must guard my assessment as someone who taught courses in Production Planning to graduate engineering students at Rutgers University starting in 1974. This book does not have the analytical rigor of the text I used then nor, say, Factory Physics by Hopp, et. al. that some use today. Nonetheless, I believe, tutorials on the general Simplex Method for Linear Programming as well as the Transportation Simplex Method and the Assignment Method should be included as Supplements. For illustrating the concepts of Shadow Prices and simple Post-Optimality analyses, these iterations are instructive. A general Errata Page for typo's and errors, especially in the problems, should be maintained on-line and be made generally accessible.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
mental tools to help tame complexity,
By
This review is from: Operations Management: Strategy and Analysis (6th Edition) (Hardcover)
I used this book during my MBA studies. It was okay, but I found it got a little detailed and too wordy at times. A more succinct writing style may have helped. Otherwise, the coverage was top-notch, since I really liked the material. The various inventory, forecasting and queuing models were nicely presented, as was linear programming. This book makes you appreciate how complex things are in the real world. Further, it offers you some mental tools to help tame that complexity, like SPC, six-sigma indices, and decision tree analysis.The companion disk had some very useful things on it: MS Project, a simulation program, and a process-mapping program. I did not use the author's Excel program, though, as we were forced to develop our own during the class.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Superior text on Operations Management,
By Chris Grosso (CO United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Operations Management: Strategy and Analysis (6th Edition) (Hardcover)
I used this book in my MBA studies and found it to be one of the best texts in any subject. As the subtitle suggests, it covers both strategic and analytical (or tactical) aspects of ops mgmt.The book is a well rounded presentation of of the subject using text, graphics, equations, examples, and cases. The most striking part of the book is in Aggregate Planning. For anyone who has worked in industry, we all know about strategic plans. How often though are other working plans created that are well linked to a strategy? Chapter 14 is the first time I have encountered a treatise on how to approach this. In addressing the types of plans, levels of plans, and their inter- relationships, the student is given the tools needed to actually implement a grand strategy, linked to workable sets of more detailed plans for each function. Outstanding.
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
|
|
Suggested Tags from Similar Products(What's this?)Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product).
|
|
This product's forum
Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
|
Related forums
|